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level. This is quite a strange level that we've never seen before, but
is used by the os2 workplace shell.
note w2k screws up this level when unicode is negotiated, so it only
passes the RAW-SEARCH test when you force non-unicode
(This used to be commit 25189b8fbf)
(which I suspect was missing some pieces)
this at least fixes the build so i can keep going on pvfs. Please review/fix Andrew.
(This used to be commit bffd18d09d)
a const pointer really means that "the data pointed to by this pointer
won't change", and that is certainly true of talloc(). The fact that
some behind-the-scenes meta-data can change doesn't matter from the
point of view of const.
this fixes a number of const warnings caused by const data structures
being passed as talloc contexts. That will no longer generate a
warning.
also changed the talloc leak reporting option from --leak-check to
--leak-report, as all it does is generate a report on exit. A new
--leak-report-full option has been added that shows the complete tree
of memory allocations, which is is quite useful in tracking things down.
NOTE: I find it quite useful to insert talloc_report_full(ptr, stderr)
calls at strategic points in the code while debugging memory
allocation problems, particularly before freeing a major context (such
as the connection context). This allows you to see if that context has
been accumulating too much data, such as per-request data, which
should have been freed when the request finished.
(This used to be commit c60ff99c31)
to get auto-naming of pointers very cheaply.
- fixed a couple of memory leaks found with the new tricks
A typical exit report for smbd is now:
talloc report on 'null_context' (total 811 bytes in 54 blocks)
auth/auth_sam.c:334 contains 20 bytes in 1 blocks
struct auth_serversupplied_info contains 498 bytes in 33 blocks
UNNAMED contains 8 bytes in 1 blocks
lib/data_blob.c:40 contains 16 bytes in 1 blocks
iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 61 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 61 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 67 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 67 bytes in 4 blocks
UNNAMED contains 13 bytes in 1 blocks
which is much better than before
(This used to be commit 6e721393d0)
following the data_blob() API properly then this will cause no
problems. I'm expecting chaos.
this is part of the general move towards using talloc for everything
in samba4
(This used to be commit 3f6b3c21e4)
I plan on replacing the concept by adding a generic destructor in all talloc ptrs, so you can do:
talloc_set_destructor(ptr, my_destructor);
to setup a function that will be called on free.
(This used to be commit 957b260621)
This version does the following:
1) talloc_free(), talloc_realloc() and talloc_steal() lose their
(redundent) first arguments
2) you can use _any_ talloc pointer as a talloc context to allocate
more memory. This allows you to create complex data structures
where the top level structure is the logical parent of the next
level down, and those are the parents of the level below
that. Then destroy either the lot with a single talloc_free() or
destroy any sub-part with a talloc_free() of that part
3) you can name any pointer. Use talloc_named() which is just like
talloc() but takes the printf style name argument as well as the
parent context and the size.
The whole thing ends up being a very simple piece of code, although
some of the pointer walking gets hairy.
So far, I'm just using the new talloc() like the old one. The next
step is to actually take advantage of the new interface
properly. Expect some new commits soon that simplify some common
coding styles in samba4 by using the new talloc().
(This used to be commit e35bb094c5)
some of it tests the .length, other code checks the
.data.
Ensure that we always NULL the .data, so that talloc-based
blobs behave just like their direct malloc equivalents.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 64121aa1a9)
implements the epm_Lookup() call, I'll add the other important calls
soon. I was rather pleased to find that epm_Lookup() worked first
time, which is particularly surprising given its complexity.
This required quite a bit of new infrastructure:
* a generic way of handling dcerpc policy handles in the rpc server
* added type checked varients of talloc. These are much less error
prone. I'd like to move to using these for nearly all uses of
talloc.
* added more dcerpc fault handling code, and translation from
NTSTATUS to a dcerpc fault code
* added data_blob_talloc_zero() for allocating an initially zero
blob
* added a endpoint enumeration hook in the dcerpc endpoint server
operations
(This used to be commit 3f85f9b782)
don't cause fragmented pdus (I'll add fragments shortly)
* change data_blob_talloc() to not zero memory when the 2nd argument
is NULL. The zeroing just masks bugs, and can't even allow a DOS
attack
* modified pidl to ensure that [ref] arguments to the out side of
functions are allocated when parsing the in side. This allows rpc
backends to assume that [ref] variables are all setup. Doesn't work
correctly for [ref] arrays yet
* changed DLIST_ADD_END() to take the type instead of a tmp
variable. This means you don't need to declare a silly tmp variable in
the caller
(This used to be commit 46e0a35819)
* moved ntlmssp code into libcli/auth/, and updated to latest ntlmssp
code from samba3 (thanks Andrew! the new interface is great)
* added signing/ntlmssp support in the dcerpc code
* added a dcerpc_auth.c module for the various dcerpc auth mechanisms
(This used to be commit c18c9b5585)